I'm new to the whole Linux biz. I have a custom-built machine, that I'm multi-booting Win98/XP/Mandrake9 on, and I have the TV set as the default display for all OS's (its a killer setup, really, big screen HD TV, the works).

After jumping through all the appropriate hoops to get Linux and the nVidia GeForce 4 MX 420 (no laughing) to get along, I have discovered that the TV-output in Linux is CONSIDERABLY more blurry than in either Windows installation.

I suspect that there might be 2 problems, but I'm not enough of an expert to figure out which one it is. Either XFree86 is implementing some kind of full-scene anti-aliasing on the desktop (can it happen?), or the "flicker filter" function available to Windows users is misadjusted in Linux, and I haven't figured out how to re-adjust it. Anyone else having problems with blurry TV output in Linux with a GF4 card?

When I was running Windows I bought a small utility which did wonders, called TVTool (http://www.tvtool.info/). When I switched to Linux, I was certain I would have to live without all the goodies that TVTool allowed. But -- surprise, surprise -- I found out about a project which offered more or less the same functionality, if maybe in a slightly less polished package. Have a look at http://sourceforge.net/projects/nv-tv-out/, install it and play around with it, you might just find the right settings.

Thanks. I had actually seen an ad earlier for this tool, and I will be trying the Linux tool to see if this will resolve it.

I was actually hoping there was native driver support for this feature in Linux though, perhaps some settings that are not specified in the readme's or FAQ's. Maybe a line that I can pop into one of the config files and everything will magically work.

Originally posted by W3ap0nX When I was running Windows I bought a small utility which did wonders, called TVTool (http://www.tvtool.info/). When I switched to Linux, I was certain I would have to live without all the goodies that TVTool allowed. But -- surprise, surprise -- I found out about a project which offered more or less the same functionality, if maybe in a slightly less polished package. Have a look at http://sourceforge.net/projects/nv-tv-out/, install it and play around with it, you might just find the right settings.

Good luck!

I could never get nv-tv-out to work with my Leadtek GeForce4 Ti 4200. From what I read, this series is not supported yet.

Ok, I'm gonna give this nv-tv-thingy a try. Its probably too late to solicit a response, cause this happening tonight, but just for documentation purposes, has there ever been a software conflict consideration with respect to the nVidia drivers themselves? I'd hate to install this neat little doo-hickey on my machine and then suddenly see fireworks on my TV.

If anyone has the nVidia drivers installed, AND has this tv-output config thing installed, and it actually works for them, I could use the advice.

Well...I installed the nv-tv-out tool. It doesn't do much. In fact, it doesn't do anything at all. It doesn't detect my tv-encoder. For that matter, I can't detect it either. Every indication I have seen is that the encoder has been integrated into the GPU. How much does that suck??

There's lots of talk of the Brooktree encoder and the C-something encoder or whatever...well, mine's inside the damn GPU! So its an nVidia encoder! Does anyone know how to make nv-tv-out work with the cheap-ass GF4 chipsets? I wish I knew C++ so I could do it myself.

Originally posted by PerfectApproach Well...I installed the nv-tv-out tool. It doesn't do much. In fact, it doesn't do anything at all. It doesn't detect my tv-encoder. For that matter, I can't detect it either. Every indication I have seen is that the encoder has been integrated into the GPU. How much does that suck??

There's lots of talk of the Brooktree encoder and the C-something encoder or whatever...well, mine's inside the damn GPU! So its an nVidia encoder! Does anyone know how to make nv-tv-out work with the cheap-ass GF4 chipsets? I wish I knew C++ so I could do it myself.